How to throw the tarot (idea)

There are already some excellent writeups on the tarot1,2, so I won't even try
here to rehash much of the history or theory. My goal is to provide a step by
step cookbook for throwing a tarot spread that, I believe, should produce pretty
good results, even for a beginner.

Abstract

What you get out of this is exactly proportionate to what you have put
in. Throwing the tarot isn't something that the Reader "does"
for the Seeker, it's something they do together. The Reader's part is as an
interpreter into the meaning of the cards, and the positions into which they
have fallen. It's up to the Seeker to pick their cards, and then see what
resonates and illuminates. For most people, the deep symbology of the Tarot
card images and stories resonate with their life experience & sort of add up
to a story somehow. Like an alternative explanation.

Tarot is best done privately and interactively. It's probably possible to use
email if you are both pretty fast typists. but it's way better if you can sit
around a kitschy little table knees to knees.

I use a tarot deck called the Rider-Waite deck3. It's one of the most
popular and it works for me, an old white guy. Depending on your
ethnicity or other factors, you may want to explore a different deck. My bruja friend, Terraza,
uses a Medicine Woman deck that has a slightly different symbology.
Cory the Celt, uses some crazy Aquarian deck that only she can fathom. In the
E2 vernacular, Cleto-El-Feato has a gnarly thing called the Aleister Crowley
Thoth Tarot Deck, but it's filled with all this really scaryEgyptian
shit, totally buggin. I don't think Cletus knows how to use it yet tho, so
you can still sleep at night.

Step One, The Question

Ask the Seeker to formulate their question. This is a moment for calm
concentration and trust. If the seeker doesn't focus and begin the process
of opening themselves up to the process you won't get a good reading. I
always request that The Question be spoken aloud. This is both because it
deepens the commitment of the seeker to the reading, and because it helps me see
the story unfold.

Step Two, handling the cards.

Extract the Major Arcana from the deck. These are cards 0 - 21, The Fool to The
World. Lay them out in a line in front of you, face up, in
order. Rebuild the deck in your hand, taking a moment to look at the
imagery on each card as you pick it up. Once you have them all together
again, turn them face down and deal all of them into four stacks. Pick the
stacks randomly and fast, like some crazy poker game. Now take one of the
stacks and rotate it so that the cards are head for toes, upside down.
Smooch them all together and do the same thing again. Now turn the deck
face up and deal them into piles, you choose how many, but toss cards that seem
to "go together," into the same pile. Don't reorient them to be
heads up, and don't agonize about it, just "throw them where they seem to
belong."

Redo as many of those steps as you want, for as long as you need to.
There's no single "right" way to handle the cards, and I'm only being
explicit because hey, this is a "cookbook" right? You'll just kind of know when you're done.

There are a bunch of different patterns that Readers use, to get the cards on
the table, so to speak. Old gypsy ladies sometimes just lay them out one
by one, in a row, reciting the reading as they go. There's also a Yin &
Yang spread and a Medicine Woman Circle that la bruja prefers. I
feel most comfortable with the Celtic Cross so that's what we'll use here.

Turn over the first card and lay it on the table without changing it's
orientation. All cards are "face up," if they appear that way to
the Seeker.

Turn over the second card and place it over the first card horizontally,
creating the "inner cross.

Starting at the bottom of the cross, closest to the Seeker, deal cards the
next four cards as follows to form the "outer cross," 3 - bottom, 4 -
top, 5 - left, 6 - right.

To the right of the two crosses, in a vertical line starting at the bottom,
deal the last four cards, 7,8,9,10. This is the "staff."

Step Four, the interpretation.

This is where the rubber meets the road, and it calls for careful words and
careful listening. We'll address each of the cards on the table in order
by reiterating what it's position in the spread means, then examining what the symbology of
the specific card suggests. This is the time for the Reader to allow the
Seeker enough room to think and respond to the unfolding interpretation.
It's their story to tell, you are only here to help them tell it.

Card One, the heart of the matter. This card represents the fundamental issue
you are addressing. If it's upside down, perhaps the issue is only just
beginning, or just wrapping up.

Card Two, the opposing factor. This is what's getting in the way at the
moment. It might also be thought of as the factor for change, or
unbalancing force that is surprising you.

Card Three, that which is beneath you. Your gut instinct about all the issue.

Card Four, the conscious influence. What your head is telling you about
it.

Card Five, the past. A receding behavior or influence.

Card Six, the future. The emerging influence, behavior or factor.

Card Seven, you, as you see yourself. Your overall perspective on
yourself and the issue at hand.

Card Eight, you, as others see you. Your current environment, or the
context in which you must operate.

Card Nine, your guidance card. Your clue to how best to proceed, or
what you might do.

Card Ten, the outcome. The most likely result or outcome. If it's
upside down it's what may occur rather than what will.

The interpretation combines the position of each card with the symbology that
the card you placed there to weave a story. The searcher must help you
provide the context for the reading. The symbology for each of the Major
Arcana cards is pretty well described in the E2 Tarot nodes, so I won't attempt
to do reprise it here1.

Step Five, transcribing the reading

Sometimes the results of a Tarot reading can be extremely intimate and
emotional. I've seen people tremble and cry, I've seen them laugh with
relief until they were sore. Those are good readings. The way you
can tell, is if the Seeker feels the archetypes in the Tarot images resonate
with their life. Bad readings are usually the result of the Seeker not
wanting or being able to calm down enough to really see and feel what is,
literally, in
front of their eyes.

Especially, in the case of a "good" reading, the nicest thing you
can do is to quickly create a short transcript of the spread and it's
interpretation for the Searcher to take home with them. It can be a lot to
remember all at once, and the next morning, they may want to review it bit by
bit.

Anyway, the transcription methodology below is my own, and it gets the job
done with a minimum of fuss. The sequential numbers represent the order of
the card in the spread. Next comes the card name and number. Negative numbers mean the card was upside down. The
meaning of each cards
position meaning is stated, followed by the narrative based on the card itself.

An Example Reading

Here's a sample reading that I did for myself this morning.

The Question was, What to Do about E2?

Card 1. Death 13 - The heart of the matter. Becoming an E2 noder is the core
issue here. It's exciting, and frustrating, and time consuming and it's
dominating my thoughts at the moment. Death probably doesn't mean what you think it
means. In the Tarot, Death is representative of one door closing behind you and
another one opening in front. For better or worse, my pre-E2 days are gone
for good.

Card 2. The Tower 16 - The opposing factor. The Tower is the chaos card, and
that's a reasonable representation of the mixture of feelings assaulting a newbie
in the target-rich E2 environment. The Tower is being hit by lightning and
people are jumping out of the flaming windows to their likely demise.
Precisely.

Card 4. The Sun 19 - What's in your head. The Sun indicates emergence from
the shadows of the moon and stars into the bright, clear daylight. It is
literally enlightenment, which is as close as I could come to stating my
conscious goals at E2.

Card 5. The Fool 0 - The past, what you are leaving behind. The Fool is the
ultimate newborn soul. He's full of wonder at everything around
him and blissful, as he steps off a cliff. Foolish behavior is a pretty
good capsule summary of my history at E2 to date. Most of what goes on at
E2 is too subtle for me to interpret yet. But I really am leaving that
happy ignorance behind me.

Card 6. The Hierophant 5 - The (immediate) future, what you are moving towards. The
hierophant represents getting a clue. Pursuing knowledge, seeking deeper
meaning, learning a cultural heritage. Surely this is what I hope my E2 future contains.

Card 7. Judgment 20 - You as you see yourself. Judgment, is pretty self
explanatory. Making an honest appraisal and acting on it is pretty much my
modus operandi. All day, every day.

Card 8. Strength 8 - You as other's see you. In this context, Strength
probably relates more to what I do in my real life. Like most everyone,
I have a lot of people who rely on me, and I try not to let them down. The
card is upside down, so it could also represent how I will come to be perceived
at E2. That would be nice.

Card 9. The World 21 - Your guide card. This card invariably pops up in my
readings and it is appropriate here as a reminder of who I really am overall and
outside of the E2 context. The World is a very positive card representing
a successful journey through many of life's phases and adventures. Hey,
I'm an old guy, perhaps an old soul as well.

Card 10. The Empress 3 - The future. The Empress represents the mothering
female principle, and usually involves someone who is dedicated to nurturing and
caring for others, and, perhaps, working with children, or newbies. The
Empress has a special meaning for me that I choose not to share here.
Suffice it to say that she's upside down here, so we're still on the fence on
this one.

Happy Seeking!

1 On E2, see the excellent Tarot Metanode by kanon42also How to read tarot cards2 Many thanks to Joan Bunning, who got me started: http://www.learntarot.com/3 Publishers of the Rider-Waite Tarot Deck: http://www.usgamesinc.com/